I saw a question recently about the Blood Hunter class, which confused me because the D&D Beyond page for it is very visually distinct from pages for Homebrew, but everything I've seen indicates that D&D 5e has been extremely reticent to introduce whole new classes, instead opting to create more varied class archetypes (e.g. Divine Soul as a Sorcerous Origin). After a little investigation, it seems to be "special" for unspecified reasons. For example, it appears in the list of Classes as neither Official nor Homebrew, but is instead the sole occupant of the "Additional" category. Thus it definitely isn't "truly official", but somebody at D&D Beyond (an official rules source) considers it substantially distinct from homebrew.

So the essence of my question is, what separates Blood Hunter from being a normal homebrew class? I can think of a few possibilities, but the actual answer might be a combination, or something else entirely.

Blood Hunter is actually official, but was published outside of sourcebooks so it gets weird treatment.

Blood Hunter is a licensed 3rd party product, so is "approved" material but not considered official for purposes like being allowed in Adventurer's League play.

Blood Hunter was developed by member(s) of the D&D 5e team, so is from an "official source" but only on a technicality.

Blood Hunter is from a highly trusted source or has been recognized as high quality by the community, but is otherwise normal homebrew.

\$\begingroup\$I think the "official rules source" bit you referenced was meant to be interpreted as a 'source of official rules', not an 'official source of rules', if that makes sense. Anyone can make a new source for official rules (roll20 also has this, for example) and keep it up-to-date, but only the creators/officiators of a thing can say that some new site or group also counts as an 'official source of rules'.\$\endgroup\$
– TylerHAug 8 '18 at 13:42

\$\begingroup\$@TylerH It's true that only Wizards of the Coast could say that a site is official, but they already did call D&D Beyond "an official digital toolset" that's "built with official D&D content", so in my experience people generally think "if D&D Beyond says something is official then it is official". Obviously that's distinct from "D&D Beyond is allowed to choose whether something is official" if that's what you're saying, but it definitely "is official" rather than just "contains official information".\$\endgroup\$
– Kamil DrakariAug 8 '18 at 13:51

3 Answers
3

Blood Hunter is unofficial third-party content by Matt Mercer, but he and Critical Role have an advertising partnership with D&D Beyond.

Nothing makes the Blood Hunter class inherently special as compared to any other homebrew class published on DMsGuild or D&D Beyond. It's not any more official or AL-legal than any other homebrew class.

The only reason it has a special placement/presentation on D&D Beyond (DDB) is that Matt Mercer and Critical Role have an advertising partnership with DDB. Apparently, as part of that partnership, DDB has agreed to provide special listings for Mercer's homebrew Blood Hunter class and his Gunslinger fighter subclass. (The same items appear on DMsGuild: Blood Hunter,1 and Gunslinger.)

DDB's character creator also lists "Critical Role Content" separately from other "Homebrew Content", presumably for the same reason.

Critical Role Partnership

We are also very happy to finally share that we have entered a long-term partnership with Critical Role!

As part of the sponsorship, we will be adding some of the custom content used at the table in the show, starting with the blood hunter class by Matt Mercer.

You can also see in the screen capture above that a new Critical Role Content category has been added. To enable CR content for your character, toggle that category "on" and you will see the blood hunter as a new option in the builder. You can also see the blood hunter under the 'Additional > Classes' section in the main navigation and classes page.

We plan to incorporate more Critical Role content over the course of the partnership, so stay tuned for that here. Also, if you aren't already a loyal viewer, now is an excellent time to jump in and experience a brand new campaign with the cast of Critical Role! Check out the first episode here.

Twitter user: The Blood Hunter is listed as an additional class on D&D Beyond, under official classes, was it made official?

Jeremy Crawford: The only official classes in D&D are in the Player's Handbook. For a new class to become official in the future, it must appear in a D&D book or must be announced as official by the D&D team.

D&D Beyond: The Blood Hunter is actually categorized under 'Additional Classes' everywhere it appears in DDB. It is specifically not under 'Official Classes' and is not considered official.

Matt Mercer: This. :)

In short: it's not official. It's basically "homebrew"/third-party content, just like anyone else's, except DDB has given it a special placement/designation because of their partnership with Critical Role.

This will not change with the release of the Explorer's Guide to Wildemount book in March 2020. Though it is the first official Wizards of the Coast book about Matt Mercer's setting of Exandria (and the continent of Wildemount within it), it doesn't affect the status of any other content by Mercer.

According to the product listing on critrole.com, the book will contain several new official character options, including 3 subclasses (the Echo Knight for fighters, and the Chronurgist and Graviturgist for wizards) and a number of new spells from Mercer's new dunamancy type of magic, among other new content. However, it will not reprint the content Mercer published on DMsGuild or in Green Ronin's Tal'Dorei Campaign Setting, or make that content any more official.

\$\begingroup\$Note: Crawford's tweet is now inaccurate as of the release of Eberron: Rising from the Last War and the updated Wayfinder's Guide to Eberron, both of which contain the artificer class. (The latter contains just 1 subclass, whereas the former contains all 3 subclasses so far.)\$\endgroup\$
– V2Blast♦Apr 13 at 1:16

Critical Role is a Non-Official Source Category on par with Homebrew and Playtest Content.

Critical Role is its own non-official source category. It is alongside homebrew and playtest material. Details are in this change log.

Critical Role Partnership

We are also very happy to finally share that we have entered a long-term partnership with Critical Role!

As part of the sponsorship, we will be adding some of the custom content used at the table in the show, starting with the blood hunter class by Matt Mercer.

You can also see in the screen capture above that a new Critical Role Content category has been added. To enable CR content for your character, toggle that category "on" and you will see the blood hunter as a new option in the builder. You can also see the blood hunter under the 'Additional > Classes' section in the main navigation and classes page.

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I think the best way of thinking of it is somewhere in between 3rd and 1st party material(2nd party). It is definitely not official, but it is endorsed by the creators of 5e, and is like an example of their "approved" homebrew content. It's like a new category 2nd party material.

\$\begingroup\$This answer is simply wrong. The Blood Hunter is not "endorsed by the creators of 5e" in any way, to my knowledge (beyond the fact that they encourage people to make the game their own in general), and is definitely not "an example of their "approved" homebrew content".\$\endgroup\$
– V2Blast♦Jan 27 at 22:07